The principle of divine kingship was maintained even when the king was replaced by rulers drawn from outside the family of the enthroned king. |
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In 1674, Shivaji elevated himself to kingship and in an elaborate ceremony in Hindu tradition proclaimed himself as a true Kshatriya. |
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These same churchmen had developed tenth-century consecration ceremonies in line with a clear idea of kingship as an office with duties. |
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One of the qualities of kingship was munificence, and generosity was always an important attribute of power. |
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But the memories of kingship could not die, and so gave birth to messianic hope. |
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This is a Lear who learns too late that kingship is no protection against ordinary mortal suffering. |
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What mattered about 1066 was that it brought both Norman kingship and French feudalism into England. |
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Pilgrimage, in his view, was an integral part of Angevin kingship, not an experience in which rulers distanced themselves from it. |
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Each army is led by a powerful Greek chieftain who aides him in regaining the kingship. |
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This, in fact, is one of the many disqualifications for kingship which emerge during his clandestine six weeks in England. |
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This is the day that I officially abdicate from my throne and pass the kingship on to my successor. |
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Confined by illness and death-threats to Whitehall, Cromwell wrestles with Parliament's offer of kingship. |
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Following the division of the Carolingian Empire in 843, the Ottonian rulers united their German kingship with the imperial crown. |
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It is rather striking how often oracles obtrude in one form or another in debates about the kingship at Sparta. |
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One family's control over the viziership came to be more stable than the transfer of kingship. |
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Macbeth cannot contemplate kingship for himself without imagining turning his sword against the king. |
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In the battle for the Theban kingship, Creon supports Oedipus' youngest son Eteocles. |
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But for all his intellectual gifts, his kingship was essentially pragmatic. |
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Often concerned with kingship, dynastic conflicts, and battles, these tales are sometimes also referred to as the king cycle. |
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Interpolations of fauna and flora transform this visual epic into a more complex commentary on kingship, politics, and justice. |
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Irish ideas had fed Carolingian notions of kingship, but the fully-fledged Carolingian royal ideology which played such a role in England was not retransmitted to Ireland. |
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Forceful, dominant, and fertile, the ram is a visual metaphor of kingship. |
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He changes the notion of kingship by riding on a colt rather than a horse. |
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When, after political struggles and a decision to divide the kingdom, Yudhihira lays claim to universal kingship, Duryodhana challenges him to a game of dice. |
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Having edited two notable collections on kingship and queenship, Anne Duggan has now logically turned her attention towards the next rank down in the hierarchy. |
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This interest in allying rulership with time and cosmos stands in full accord with the ceremonial and commemorative practices of Maya dynastic kingship. |
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Rather, the essential dynamic for political and governmental action in both realms continued to be kingship, seeking opportunities for the expression of its regality. |
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Only the Picts, possibly, diverged from the European pattern of male descent with their apparently matrilinear succession to the kingship, though this is much debated. |
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Under the rules of the Salic law the crown of France could not pass to a woman nor could the line of kingship pass through the female line. |
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This direct relationship between Zeus and Odysseus represents the kingship of Odysseus. |
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The form of societal hierarchy known as chiefdom or tribal kingship is prehistoric. |
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He tried to claim the kingship, but with no support and no chance of a coronation in Pavia. |
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This kingship changed from Franks to Saxons, who had suffered greatly during the conquests of Charlemagne. |
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Louis the German, then in rebellion, received nothing of the crown jewels or liturgical books associated with Carolingian kingship. |
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Thus the symbols and rituals of East Frankish kingship were created from scratch. |
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The title of Romulus was associated too strongly with notions of monarchy and kingship, an image that Octavian tried to avoid. |
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Pepin brought the question of the kingship before Pope Zachary, asking whether it was logical for a king to have no royal power. |
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At Felix's death in 670 the joint property of the kingship reverted entirely to Lupus. |
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Iceland remained under Norwegian kingship until 1380, when the death of Olaf II of Denmark extinguished the Norwegian male royal line. |
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Monarchies carried sacral kingship into the Middle Ages, encouraging the idea of kings installed by the Grace of God. |
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In the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem, the kingship was partially elected and partially hereditary. |
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Candidates had to be of royal blood, but the kingship was elected by a council of noblemen, rather than automatically passing to the eldest son. |
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However, it was still not uncommon for several rulers to share the kingship. |
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The belief in divine kingship prevailed into the eighteenth century, although by that time its religious implications had limited impact. |
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He also wrote on kingship, arguing that a ruler should be called king only if he obtained and exercised power in a lawful manner. |
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On the first Friday morning of his kingship he went into the kitchen and called for his royal chef. |
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The uncertain practices in local kingship cause similar problems when interpreting the succession to the high kingship. |
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The unified kingdom of Alba retained some of the ritual aspects of Pictish and Scottish kingship. |
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Given that Pepin's claim to the kingship was now based on an authority higher than Frankish custom, no resistance was offered to Pepin. |
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There are instances recorded where women participated both in warfare and in kingship, although they were in the minority in these areas. |
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Afraid of the Romans, Cole submitted to Roman law so long as he retained his kingship. |
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He met contemporary expectations of kingship in his role as an able, determined soldier and in his embodiment of shared chivalric ideals. |
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His favourite pursuit was the art of war and, in this, he conformed to the medieval notion of good kingship. |
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It has been argued that St Edmund's story was informed by common Celtic and Germanic notions of sacred kingship. |
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He meets Asclepiodotus in battle and kills him, thus taking the kingship of Britain upon himself. |
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Afraid of the Romans, Coel meets Constantius and agrees to pay tribute and submit to Roman laws as long as he is allowed to retain the kingship. |
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His kingship was thought to contain elements of the early modern absolute monarchy as exemplified by the Tudor dynasty. |
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Lady Macbeth suffers none of her husband's uncertainty and wishes him to murder Duncan in order to obtain kingship. |
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Macbeth realises that these are all Banquo's descendants having acquired kingship in numerous countries. |
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During this time, the distinction between kingship and godhood had not yet occurred, as the caste system had not yet been introduced. |
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Tanistry meant that the kingship usually went to whichever relative was deemed to be the most fitting. |
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The Picts are often said to have practised matrilineal kingship succession on the basis of Irish legends and a statement in Bede's history. |
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The nature of kingship changed considerably during the centuries of Pictish history. |
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Diarmait fled Ireland and sought help from Henry II in regaining the kingship of Leinster. |
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A modified version of the Humble Petition with the clause on kingship removed was ratified on 25 May. |
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The Pictish institution of kingship provided the basis for merger with the Gaelic Alpin dynasty. |
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Michael Lynch followed and built upon Barrow's compromise solution, arguing that as David's reign progressed, his kingship became more Celtic. |
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Thus, from about 1057 until his death in 1063, the whole of Wales recognised the kingship of Gruffudd ap Llywelyn. |
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Its clerics developed the theory of a high kingship of Ireland and wrote tracts exhorting kings to rule rather than reign. |
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Following further negotiations, Maximian was given the kingship of Britain and Octavius retired. |
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Five years into his kingship, Magnus Maximus assembled a vast fleet and invaded Gaul, leaving Britain in the control of Caradocus. |
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Kent had a long tradition of joint kingship, with east and west Kent under separate kings, though one king was typically dominant. |
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The nature of Mercian kingship is not clear from the limited surviving sources. |
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This gave Rhodri no standing to claim the kingship of Seisyllwg himself, but he was able to install his son Cadell as a subject king. |
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At Ayutthaya, however, the paternal aspects of kingship disappeared. |
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In addition to its appearance in her novel Lammas Night noted above, Katherine Kurtz also uses the idea of sacred kingship in her novel The Quest for Saint Camber. |
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In many historical societies, the position of kingship carries a sacral meaning, that is, it is identical with that of a high priest and of judge. |
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Fearful that Belisarius might set himself up a permanent kingship should he consolidate his conquests, Justinian recalled him to Constantinople with Witiges in tow. |
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Zeus then challenged Cronus to war for the kingship of the gods. |
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While this gave Rhodri no standing to press a claim to kingship himself, he was able to install his and Angharad's younger son, Cadell, as the new King of Seisyllwg. |
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Llywelyn's son Gruffydd would unite all Wales under his own kingship, displacing his cousins in Deheubarth, and even expanding into England affecting politics there. |
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The concept of national kingship is first articulated in the 7th century, but only became a political reality in the Viking Age, and even then not a consistent one. |
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He instilled a great deal of power into each earldom, allowing them control of the surrounding towns and land, rather than retaining it within the kingship. |
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And unlike ancient human epics telling of the kingship of Gilgamesh, the conquest of Troy, or the civil war of the Kurus and Pandavas, these songs are true in every detail. |
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While earlier kings had to be successful war leaders to maintain their authority, kingship became rather less personalised and more institutionalised during this time. |
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With Charles, government became more absolute, even though until his mother's death in 1555 Charles did not hold the full kingship of the country. |
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Succession to the chieftainship or kingship was through tanistry. |
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Although the person of the king as a leader could be exalted, the office of kingship was not in any sense as powerful or as invested with authority as it was to become. |
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Alfred saw kingship as a priestly office, a shepherd for his people. |
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Parliament reversed his attainder and recorded Richard's kingship as illegal, although the Yorkist king's reign remained officially in the annals of England history. |
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Nevertheless, he held the respect of his subjects for the way he embodied the medieval ideal of kingship, as a soldier, an administrator and a man of faith. |
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In 1513, he was executed after Richard de la Pole, whom Louis XII of France had recognised as king of England the previous year, claimed the kingship in his own right. |
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In any event, Olaf was ousted from the kingship a second time by the Northumbrians, this time in favour of Eric son of Harald, according to MS E of the Chronicle. |
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During his second expedition Caesar defeated Cassivellaunus and restored Mandubracius to the kingship, and Cassivellaunus undertook not to molest him again. |
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He was more sympathetic to Rome than his father had been, and based on numismatic evidence styled himself rex, implying client kingship status under the Empire. |
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This trade probably thrived as a result of political links and client kingship relationships that developed between groups in Southeast Britain and the Roman world. |
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Unlike his father, however, Pepin decided to seize the Frankish kingship. |
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A main element uniting Germanic societies was kingship, in origin a sacral institution combining the functions of military leader, high priest, lawmaker and judge. |
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